The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Scientists reveal our empty oceans

EXCLUSIVE: SCOTS TEAM EXPOSES LIFELESS SEAS Research: 90% of Atlantic plankton lost

- By Mark Howarth

Scientists have discovered a catastroph­ic loss of life in our oceans, we can reveal.

An Edinburgh-based research team fears plankton, the tiny organisms that sustain life in our seas, has all but been wiped out after spending two years collecting water samples from the Atlantic.

The landmark research blames chemical pollution from plastics, farm fertiliser­s and pharmaceut­icals in the water. Previously, it was thought the amount of plankton had halved since the 1940s, but the evidence gathered by the Scots suggest 90% has now vanished.

The scientists warn there are only a few years left before the consequenc­es become catastroph­ically clear when fish, whales and dolphins become extinct, with grave implicatio­ns for the planet. In the report, the researcher­s from the Global Oceanic Environmen­tal Survey Foundation (Goes) state: “An environmen­tal catastroph­e is unfolding. We believe humanity could adapt to global warming and extreme weather changes. It is our view that humanity will not survive the extinction of most marine plants and animals.”

The findings have prompted calls for urgent action on a number of fronts as observers warn the promises of Cop26 to ease the climate crisis have, so far, amounted to little. Fiona Nicholls, an oceans campaigner for Greenpeace UK, said: “Our oceans can be our allies in fighting climate change, but there is simply no time to waste.”

Goes – based at Edinburgh University’s Roslin Innovation Centre in Midlothian – has been collecting samples from the Atlantic and the Caribbean from its yacht, Copepod. Setting out from Scotland, it sailed along

French and Portuguese coasts before crossing the Atlantic. The yacht is currently moored in Cartagena, Colombia, before setting sail for Panama this week.

In addition to their own samples, the Goes researcher­s have provided monitoring equipment to other sailing boat crews so that they can perform the same trawls and report back with their results.

The team, led by marine biologist and former Scottish Government adviser Dr Howard Dryden, has compiled and analysed informatio­n from 13 vessels and more than 500 data points.

Now they have alerted the scientific community to their findings and are appealing for the troubling implicatio­ns to be understood and acted upon before it is too late.

Plankton is made up of the billions of marine creatures and plants that drift in the currents of oceans and seas. The category covers a huge variety of species, many of them microscopi­c. However, they are fundamenta­l to life on Earth as they form the bottom rung of the food chain. Plankton is consumed by the krill which are fed on by the fish that, in turn, provide nutrition for terrestria­l animals including billions of humans.

Numerous types also perform a vital role in regulating climate change by helping oceans absorb carbon dioxide and giving off the chemical dimethyl sulphide, which assists in creating clouds.

But plankton needs the right conditions to thrive, including water that is slightly alkaline. However, the oceans are slowly turning more acidic.

An overload of CO2, along with a deluge of lethal manmade chemicals in cosmetics, plastics, sunscreen, drugs and fertiliser­s, is inundating the marine environmen­t. This brew is proving toxic to underwater life and once the water reaches a tipping point of acidity, vast amounts of plankton will simply dissolve.

Every year, 18 million tons of heavy oil fuel is spilt into the seas by the shipping industry and breaks up into tiny particles that are toxic to plankton.

Citing previous studies, Goes researcher­s had been expecting to discover 20 such microscopi­c specks per litre of Atlantic water – but actually counted between 100 and 1,000.

They expected to find up to five visible pieces of plankton in every 10 litres of water – but found an average of less than one. The discovery suggests that plankton faces complete wipe-out sooner than was expected.

The Goes report concludes: “If we destroy plankton, the planet will become more humid, accelerate climate change, and with no clouds it will also become arid and wind velocities will be extreme.

“Yes, of course, we need to continue to reduce CO2 emissions but even if we were carbon-neutral, it will not stop ocean acidificat­ion – it will not stop the loss of all the seals, whales, marine birds, fish and food supply for two billion people.

“CO2 reduction won’t even stop climate change; indeed, we will have catastroph­ic climate change because we have not fixed the primary root cause – the destructio­n of nature by toxic chemicals and substances such as plastic.

“We have two choices. We can choose

to wake up, understand and address the real issue or choose the game-over button for humanity come 2050.”

From his ongoing mission in Colombia, Dryden – who addressed the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow last year – told The Sunday Post: “Based on our observatio­ns, plankton numbers have already crashed and are now at the levels that I predicted would not happen for another quarter of a century.

“Given that plankton is the life-support system for the planet and humanity cannot survive without it, the result is disturbing. It will be gone in around 25 years. Our results confirmed a 90% reduction in primary productivi­ty in the Atlantic. Effectivel­y, the Atlantic Ocean is now pretty much dead.

“We surveyed the Caribbean from St Lucia to Grenada. Now the only fish available in restaurant­s there is imported farmed Atlantic salmon.

“It had been reported that 50% of the coral was gone; our observatio­ns were that the coral is 100% gone in many locations and 90% gone in all locations.”

Dryden says the first step for survival is for us all to truly understand the peril our species is in – and then do our bit in saving nature so it can save us.

And everyone – from families, farmers and financiers to scientists and supermarke­ts, ministers and multinatio­nals – has a part to play.

He explained: “We cannot stop climate change by simply reducing CO2 emissions. However, we can clean up our pollution to give us clean air and clear rivers and bring life back to the oceans. We could potentiall­y live with climate change, but we will not survive the destructio­n of nature. If we can bring back nature, though, we also solve climate change.”

He said that during the pandemic, because of the lack of tourism, ecosystems had started to recover. Fish have returned and coral reefs have recovered.

Dryden added: “People cause pollution, and in most of the world there is no effluent treatment. Covid has shown us that if we eliminate pollution then ecosystems have high capacity to spring back.”

Calum Duncan, head of Scottish conservati­on at the Marine Conservati­on Society, said: “There are multiple drivers for ocean decline, including climate change, pollution, overfishin­g and unsustaina­ble developmen­t.

“We need to tackle the climate and nature emergencie­s together by transformi­ng both our land and sea use toward a truly sustainabl­e and circular model.

“That includes turning off the tap on all damaging pollutants, both atmospheri­c and waterborne, and suitably protecting all of our ocean. However, with less than 1% of our seas under high levels of protection, we have a long way to go.”

Earlier this month, at the UN Ocean Conference in Portugal, 150 nations signed a declaratio­n emphasisin­g the importance of conserving the seas. But campaigner­s say concrete action is now needed at next month’s IGC5 summit in New York, at which negotiator­s will try to hammer out the wording of a treaty to protect global waters.

Nicholls warned: “If a treaty is not finalised next month, it will be almost impossible to reverse the damage to the world’s oceans.”

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 ?? ?? A humpback whale dives in the Atlantic Ocean off Iceland, main, as scientists warn the loss of lifesustai­ning plankton, above, will risk extinction of life in the world’s oceans
A humpback whale dives in the Atlantic Ocean off Iceland, main, as scientists warn the loss of lifesustai­ning plankton, above, will risk extinction of life in the world’s oceans

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